More Than Just Paper Dolls

It was around five years ago that I first wowed my kids with this magical trick.

Back then it was rain that kept us inside and made us stir crazy, but today it was extreme heat.
Back then I only had three kids, but today I have four.
Back then the little hands struggled with the cutting out (I’ve shared some of the photos from the back in 2011 so you can see how little my kids were back then!), but today they found it easy.
Back then they were all driving me bonkers and I needed to do something to avert disaster, and today was no different.

So much changes over the years, and yet so much stays the same.

This is such a simple activity, one that the kids really love, one that we’ve done over and over again, that I thought it was time to update my original post from way back in 2011 and share it again.

I’m sure you remember how to make a chain of paper dolls, but let’s refresh our memories and show our kids the simple process involved.

To make paper cut out chains you’ll need:

Long narrow strips of paper – we use our Ikea paper roll, or sheets of newspaper cut into strips.

Scissors

Markers or pencils to colour and add features

A paper clip or binder clip is useful for holding the layers together while kids cut.

First you need to fold your paper concertina style, then clip the paper together to make it easier to keep together while drawing and cutting.

Now draw your design makings sure some part of it is touching each side of the paper.

I drew red marks on the paper at each side to show my kids where their drawings need to touch the edge so the chains would be connected.

Cut around your design carefully, make sure you don’t cut the edges that need to stay connected.

Then carefully unfold your chain to see how it worked.

You can start with a simple paper doll but there are so many other fun things you can make with this simple paper cutout chain activities.
Here are a few simple paper cutout chain ideas ideas we’ve tried over the years:

people

people standing under an umbrella or a tree

monsters

teddy bears

bees, bugs, bats or birds with connected wings

spiders or bugs with legs connected

flowers

trees

fish

boats

hearts

stars

suns

clouds

snowflakes

houses

You can connect almost any shape you can cut out by leaving a little tab connected at each side, or by leaving a strip across the bottom intact (so it looks like your design is standing on the ground). Let your imagination run wild and try out some ideas.

It might take the kids a few goes to work out how to make sure their designs are connected, and little ones will struggle with the concept, but you can easily convert their simple drawings and cut them out for them to decorate.

Here are some we made years ago back when my kids were still little and cute…

And here are some we made just yesterday…

Some days you need to pull out something magical, something that will wow your kids into submission and get them all doing something productive instead of running around the house fighting. The older my kids get, the fewer of these tricks I have left, but these simple paper cut out chains are always a winner!

Do you have any magic tricks that you pull out when things get grim at your place?